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In praise of Ardern

Kiwi prime minister Jacinda ardern has won praise for tackling the country’s most shocking tragedy with empathy, and resolve.

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SCARCELY 18 months in office, Jacinda Ardern faces an era-defining tragedy for her country – and is winning praise for meeting the moment with a deft mix of empathy and resolve.

Tragedies like the murder of 50 Muslim worshipper­s in Christchur­ch can shape nations.

They can also derail political careers and cement a leader’s place in the history books – for good or for ill.

Barack Obama’s tearful public appearance after 20 elementary school children were murdered at Sandy Hook in 2012 and his singing of Amazing Grace at the memorial for slain pastor Clementa Pinckney were seminal moments of his eight years in the White House.

Vladimir Putin’s first months in office were thoroughly overshadow­ed by images of him holidaying on the Black Sea as all 118 submariner­s aboard the sunken Kursk lay dead.

Within hours of the mosque massacres, Ardern was in Christchur­ch, wearing a headscarf in a poignant show of solidarity with victims’ families.

The next day, in the capital Wellington, she put on the headscarf again and was seen in emotional embraces with members of the shell-shocked Muslim community.

The heartfelt expression­s of solidarity and shared pain embodied the sense of vulnerabil­ity many Kiwis now feel, and offered a powerful rebuttal of the politics of hate.

“She never had to deal with something so horrific,” said Vicki Spencer, of the University of Otago’s politics department, “nor has any other New Zealand Prime Minister.”

But she quickly moved beyond the role of consoler-in-chief to confront the challenges posed by an Australian white supremacis­t who, unbeknowns­t to any security agency, was able to come to her country, legally purchase weapons of war, and devastate the nation.

Within hours of the tragedy, Ardern started tackling those challenges, declaring: “I can tell you right now, our gun laws will change.”

“I know that there is, understand­ably, grief in New Zealand right now, but there is anger too, there are questions that need to be answered,” she said later in one of many televised interviews, the tone both reassuring and firm.

“Empathy has always been one of her strengths and never has it shown more,” said David Farrar of the popular politicall­y-focused Kiwiblog.

“The picture of her in Christchur­ch wearing a headscarf looking devastated is a pow- erful iconic image. I think Ardern has been near perfect in her response to the tragedy.”

Baby politics

Until the gunman walked into the Al Noor Mosque in Christchur­ch on Friday afternoon, Ardern was better known around the world as a new mother holding down a difficult and busy job.

She became an instant champion for working women the world over when she brought her infant daughter Neve onto the floor of the UN Assembly in New York in the United States last year.

Becoming only the second prime minister in the world to give birth while in office – after Pakistan’s Benazir Bhutto in 1990 – allowed the leader of a small, remote nation of just 4.5 million people to enjoy an extraordin­arily high profile.

She has graced talk show host Stephen Colbert’s couch, met with celebritie­s such as Anne Hathaway and shared parenting tips with the panel of NBC’s Today Show.

Amid a sea of conservati­ve leaders, the 38-year-old has become a hero to the disgruntle­d centre-left around the world.

Like Canadian Prime minister Justin Trudeau, her advocacy for climate action and gender equality has led her to be branded the anti-Trump.

Like Trudeau, Ardern has not been shy about expressing her displeasur­e at US President Donald Trump’s politics or leveraging his unpopulari­ty in New Zealand to boost her own.

When Trump called to ask what he could do to help in the wake of the shootings, Ardern had no qualms about divulging their usually private leader-to-leader chat.

“He asked what he could do, and I think I simply conveyed the sentiment that exists here within New Zealand. My message was sympathy and love for all Muslim communitie­s,” she said in a press conference broadcast around the world.

According to Spencer, that message to Trump was “clearly genuine and has resonated strongly with New Zealanders.”

Despite such a sure political touch, Ardern’s lustre had been starting to fade at home.

Her legislativ­e agenda had been stymied repeatedly by wily coalition partner, Winston Peters and his populist New Zealand First party.

At a crisis cabinet meeting Monday, she harnessed the political moment to sweep aside Peters’ longstandi­ng opposition to gun control.

The 73-year-old could do little more than stand beside her at the podium and acknowledg­e “the reality is that after 1pm on Friday our world changed forever.”

So did New Zealand politics. — AFP

 ??  ?? ardern, right, hugs and consoles a woman as she visited Kilbirnie Mosque to lay flowers among tributes to christchur­ch attack victims, in Wellington, New Zealand. — Photos: aP
ardern, right, hugs and consoles a woman as she visited Kilbirnie Mosque to lay flowers among tributes to christchur­ch attack victims, in Wellington, New Zealand. — Photos: aP
 ??  ?? Floral tributes for those who were gunned down at the two mosques against a wall bordering the Botanical Garden in christchur­ch, New Zealand. — aFP
Floral tributes for those who were gunned down at the two mosques against a wall bordering the Botanical Garden in christchur­ch, New Zealand. — aFP
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